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Understanding and Responding to Adverse Childhood Experiences in the School Setting
1/14/2016
Vezzuto and Kahn, OCDE 1
Understanding and Responding to Adverse Childhood Experiences in the School Setting
Pamela Kahn, MPH, BS, RNCoordinator, Health and Wellness
Lucy Vezzuto, Ph.D.Student Mental Health, Social-Emotional Learning & School Climate
Orange County Department of Education,Center for Healthy Kids & Schools
Our Focus The types of childhood trauma and what makes
an experience traumatic.
Brain development and the relationship between early adverse experiences and subsequent youth health and behaviors.
What is the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study?
How educators can create a trauma-informed school with a multi-tiered system of support services
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What is Trauma? The word “trauma” is used to describe
experiences or situations that are emotionally painful and distressing, and that overwhelm people’s ability to cope, leaving them powerless. (Center for Nonviolence & Social Justice, 2016)
*
Trauma Prevalent in the lives of children. Affects learning and school performance,
and causes physical and emotional distress. Children/teens experience the same
emotions as adults, but may not have the words to express them.
Schools have an important role to play in meeting the social/emotional needs of students◦ Trauma sensitive schools help children feel safe
to learn.
What Makes an Experience Traumatic?
Overwhelming, very painful, very scary Fight or Flight incapacitated Threat to physical or psychological safety Loss of control Unable to regulate emotions
Trauma is the response to the event, not the event itself.
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Acute Trauma
• Single incident (crime victim, serious accident, natural disaster)
• Treatment includes immediate support, removal from the scene of the trauma, use of medication for immediate relief of grief, anxiety, and insomnia, and brief supportive psychotherapy provided in the context of crisis intervention.
Complex Trauma Protracted exposure to prolonged social and/or interpersonal
trauma in the context of dependence, captivity or entrapment. (ex. chronic maltreatment, neglect or abuse in a care-giving relationship, hostages, prisoners of war, concentration camp survivors, and survivors of some religious cults).
Often results in borderline or antisocial personality disorder or dissociative disorders. Behavioral difficulties (such as impulsivity, aggression, sexual acting out, eating
disorders, alcohol or drug abuse, and self-destructive actions) Extreme emotional difficulties (intense rage, depression, or panic) and mental
difficulties (fragmented thoughts, dissociation, and amnesia). The treatment of such patients often takes much longer, may progress at a
much slower rate, and requires a sensitive and highly structured treatment program delivered by a team of trauma specialists
Complex trauma
• Is chronic Begins in early
childhood Occurs within the
child's primary caregiving system and/or social environment
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Prevalence of Youth Trauma 68% of children and adolescents experienced at
least one potentially traumatic event by age 16.
In one study, 78% of children reportedly had multiple adversities, with an average initial exposure at age 5 years
Data suggest that every classroom has at least one student affected by trauma.
Students living in poverty, homelessness, and with other social vulnerabilities are significantly more apt to experience stress and trauma.
(Copeland, Keeler Angold & Costello, 2007; Cook, Blaustein, Spinazzolla, & Vander Kolk , 2003)
Trauma’s Impact on Brain Development Attachment:
◦ Trouble with relationships, boundaries, empathy, and social isolation Physical Health:
◦ Impaired sensorimotor development, coordination problems, increased medical problems, and somatic symptoms
Emotional Regulation: ◦ Difficulty identifying or labeling feelings and communicating needs
Dissociation: ◦ Altered states of consciousness, amnesia, impaired memory
Cognitive Ability:◦ Problems with focus, learning, processing new information, language development, planning
and orientation to time and space Self-Concept:
◦ Lack of consistent sense of self, body image issues, low self-esteem, shame and guilt Behavioral Control:
◦ Difficulty controlling impulses, oppositional behavior, aggression, disrupted sleep and eating patterns, trauma re-enactment
Source; Cook, A., Spinazzola, P., Ford, J., Lanktree, C., Blaustein, M., Cloitre, M., et al. (2005). Complex trauma in children and adolescents. Psychiatric Annals, 35(5), 390-398.
Physical Effects of Trauma on the Brain
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Trauma Impacts on Child Behavior
Trauma causes brain to adapt in ways that contributed to their survival (i.e. constant fight/flight/freeze).
↓These adaptations can look like behavior problems in
“normal” contexts, such as school.↓
When triggered, “feeling” brain dominates the “thinking” brain.
↓The normal developmental process is interrupted, and
students may exhibit internalizing or externalizing behaviors.
Common Triggers for Traumatized Children
Unpredictability or sudden change Transition from one setting/activity to another Loss of control Feelings of vulnerability or rejection Confrontation, authority, or limit setting Loneliness Sensory overload (too much stimulation from
the environment)
Fight, Flight & Freeze; What do these Look Like in Children?
• FIGHT • Hyperactivity, verbal aggression, oppositional behavior,
limit testing, physical aggression, “bouncing off the walls”
• FLIGHT
• Withdrawal, escaping, running away, self-isolation, avoidance
• FREEZE
• Stilling, watchfulness, looking dazed, daydreaming, forgetfulness, shutting down emotionally
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Warning Signs
Look for moments when the intensity of the child’s response does not match the intensity of the stressor
Or when a child’s behaviors seem inexplicable or confusing. Consider—might the student’s alarm system have gone off?
Remember: the primary function of the triggered response is to help the child achieve safety in the face of perceived danger.
How Trauma Affects Learning
Traumatic stress from adverse childhood experiences can undermine the ability to form relationships, regulate emotions, and impair cognitive functions.
Hyper arousal, intrusion or constriction may interfere with processing of verbal/nonverbal and written information
Ability to organize material sequentially may be inhibited due to coming from a chaotic environment.
Difficulty with classroom transitions Problem solving from a different point of view, inferring
ideas, or working in group/exhibiting empathy may result when students do not feel safe expressing a preference.
Children with toxic stress live their lives in fight, flight or fright (freeze) mode
Students overloaded with stress hormones and unable to function appropriately can’t focus on schoolwork.
They fall behind in school/fail to develop healthy relationships with peers or create problems with teachers or principals because they are unable to trust adults.
With failure, despair, and frustration pecking away at their psyches, they find solace in food, alcohol, tobacco, methamphetamines, inappropriate sex, high-risk sports, and/or work.
They don’t regard these coping methods as problems. They see them as a way to obtain relief and to escape from depression, anxiety, anger, fear and shame.
In other words, a solution, not a problem.
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The ACEs Study It was 1985, and Dr. Vincent Felitti was mystified.
The physician, chief of Kaiser Permanente’s revolutionary Department of Preventive Medicine in San Diego, CA, couldn’t figure out why, each year for the last five years, more than half of the people in his obesity clinic dropped out. Although people who wanted to shed as little as 30 pounds could participate, the clinic was designed for people who were 100 to 600 pounds overweight.
Almost all of the dropouts had been losing, not gaining, weight. It didn’t make sense. Why were people who were dropping pounds dropping out?
In a careful study of 286 such patients, Dr. Felitti learned that many had been unconsciously using obesity as a shield against unwanted sexual attention, or as a form of defense against physical attack, and that many of them had been sexually and/or physically abused as children.
Although obesity was conventionally viewed as the problem, it was often found to be the unconscious solution to other, far more concealed, problems.
ACEs Study Begins:
Dr. Robert Anda, a medical epidemiologist at the CDC had been studying how depression and feelings of hopelessness affected coronary heart disease.
Collaboration began between the CDC and Kaiser Permanente’s Health Appraisal Clinic in San Diego.
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ACEs Study• Retrospective approach examined the link
between multiple types of childhood stressors and adult health for over 17,000 adult participants.• A questionnaire asked for detailed information on
their past history of abuse, neglect and family dysfunction as well as their current behaviors and health status.
• Took place between 1995 and 1997, CDC still tracking the medical status of the baseline participants.
ACE Study Key Concept
Stressful or traumatic childhood experiences can result in social, emotional, and cognitive impairments.
◦ Fear-based childhoods disrupt neurodevelopment, and can actually alter normal brain structure and function
The ACE Study Pyramid
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Three Types of ACEs
http://www.npr.org/assets/img/2015/02/20/aces-1_custom.jpg
What is an ACE Score?
An ACE score is a tally of different types of abuse, neglect, and other hallmarks of a rough childhood.
According to the Adverse Childhood Experiences study, the rougher your childhood, the higher your score is likely to be and the higher your risk for later health problems.
ACE Score The ACE score is the total number of ACEs that
each participant reported.
◦ For example, experiencing physical neglect would be an ACE score of one; if the child also witnessed a parent being treated violently, the ACE score would be two.
◦ Given an exposure to one category, there is an 80% likelihood of exposure to another.
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ACEs Increases Health Risks
The ACE QuestionnairePrior to your 18th birthday: Did a parent or other adult in the household often or very often… Swear at you, insult you, put you
down, or humiliate you? or Act in a way that made you afraid that you might be physically hurt?No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Did a parent or other adult in the household often or very often… Push, grab, slap, or throw something at you? or Ever hit you so hard that you had marks or were injured?No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Did an adult or person at least 5 years older than you ever… Touch or fondle you or have you touch their body in a sexual way? or Attempt or actually have oral, anal, or vaginal intercourse with you?No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Did you often or very often feel that … No one in your family loved you or thought you were important or special? or Your family didn’t look out for each other, feel close to each other, or support each other?No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Did you often or very often feel that … You didn’t have enough to eat, had to wear dirty clothes, and had no one to protect you? or Your parents were too drunk or high to take care of you or take you to the doctor if you needed it?No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Was a biological parent ever lost to you through divorce, abandonment, or other reason ?No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Was your mother or stepmother:Often or very often pushed, grabbed, slapped, or had something thrown at her? or Sometimes, often, or very often kicked, bitten, hit with a fist, or hit with something hard? or Ever repeatedly hit over at least a few minutes or threatened with a gun or knife?No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Did you live with anyone who was a problem drinker or alcoholic, or who used street drugs?No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Was a household member depressed or mentally ill, or did a household member attempt suicide? No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Did a household member go to prison?No___IfYes, enter 1 __
Now add up your “Yes” answers:_ This is your ACE Score
The ACE Comprehensive Chart
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More than half of adolescents have had at least one of these adverse childhood experiences, and nearly one in ten have experienced four or more.
experiences, and nearly one in ten have experienced four or more.
Source: NSCH 2011/2012For Children ages 0-17
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ACE’s & Negative Well-Being
ACE and Risky Behaviors
The higher the ACE score, the more we see risky health behaviors in childhood and adolescence including:◦ Pregnancies◦ Suicide attempts◦ Early initiation of smoking ◦ Sexual activity◦ Illicit drug use
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ACE Exposure and Education As early as the 1960’s research established direct
connections between childhood disadvantage and diminished educational outcomes. ◦ Disparities in early-childhood experience produced disparities in
cognitive skill – most significant, in literacy- that could be observed on the first day of Kindergarten and well into adulthood.
Among patients with an ACE score of 0, just 3% display learning/behavior problems.
Among patients with a score of ≥ 4, the figure is 51%.*
*Burke, J., Hellman, J., Scott, B., Weems, C. & Carrion, V. The impact of adverse childhood experiences on an urban pediatric population. Child Abuse & Neglect, 2011:35(6): 408-413
What Can Schools Do?Findings suggest that building resilience—defined in the survey as “staying calm and in control when faced with a challenge,” for children ages 6–17—can ameliorate the negative impact of adverse childhood experiences.
We recommend a coordinated effort to fill knowledge gaps and translate existing knowledge about adverse childhood experiences and resilience into national, state, and local policies…Bethell, C., Newacheck, P, Hawees, E. & Halfon, N.,10.1377/hlthaff.2014.0914 Health Aff December 2014 vol. 33 no. 12 2106-2115
•Responsive caregiving provided to youth from trusted adults can moderate the effects of early stress and neglect associated with trauma
•Building resilience can counter the effects of trauma/ACE’s and help lead youth to more effective, productive and healthy adulthoods
St. Andrews, Alicia (2013). Trauma and Resilience: An Adolescent Provider Toolkit. San Francisco, CA: Adolescent Health Working Group, San Francisco, CA
Resilience
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Schools Play A Critical Role In Supporting Students
◦ Many students experience serious stress or adversity at some point during their school careers◦ Many students have trauma histories that go
unrecognized in school.◦ Schools have an opportunity to provide a
range of supports to students who experience stress or trauma through a multi-tiered system of supports approach.
(Rossen & Cowan, 2013)
Why Should Schools Be Trauma Informed?
Children are more likely to access mental health services through primary care and schools than through specialty mental health clinics
Over 70% of students who do receive mental health services, receive those services in schools
Children with mental health disorders struggle in school and are less likely to succeed academically
(Costello et. al., 1998; Duchnowski, Kutash & Friedman, 2002; Mental health America of Greater Houston, 2011; SRI International, 2015)
Using a “Trauma Lens”
A shift in perspective…From “What is wrong with this student?”
To “What has this student been through?”
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What might you notice about students?
Difficulty with…• Organization• Cause and effect• Taking another’s
perspective• Attentiveness• Regulating emotions• Executive functions• Engaging in the
curriculum• Transitions
What might you notice about students?
• Reactivity and impulsivity
• Aggression and defiance
• Withdrawal/avoidance• Perfectionism• Repetitive thoughts or
comments about death or dying
• Non-age appropriate behavior
• Anxiety/worry about safety of self and others
• Poor or changed school performance and attendance
• Overly protective of personal space or belongings
Perry 2010
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Danger and safety are the core concerns of traumatized children even in mostly safe places like school.
Traumatic events outside school can generate distressing reminders in the hallway, in the classroom or anywhere on school grounds that interfere with a student’s ability to regulate their emotions and to learn.
Protective factors, such as positive relationships with teachers and peers in schools can reduce the adverse impact of trauma
Trauma plays an major role among at risk and special populations: Children in the Child Welfare and Juvenile Justice Systems, Children in Special Education, LGBTQ Children, Children in Areas of Poverty, Gang Violence and Crime, Children with MH Challenges, etc.Wong, 2013
Understanding Effects of Trauma On Children in Schools
What is a strategy you have employed in your work that supports youth who've experienced trauma?
What is something you learned from experience that DOES NOT work?
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A Trauma-Informed School (TIS)Key Components Establishing a shared definition of a TIS
Enhancing trauma awareness throughout the school community
Conducting thorough assessment of school climate
◦ Inclusiveness
◦ Respect for Diversity◦ Identifying Risk Factors
◦ Identifying Protective Factors
Developing trauma-informed discipline policies
Awareness of prevalence & impact of secondary traumatic stress on teachers and staff
Wong,2013
Examples of Services and Programs
Psychological First Aid: Listen Protect Connect Support to Students Exposed to Trauma (SSET) PBIS Restorative Practices Range of Activities – Student Interest Groups Community Internships Crisis Intervention Mental Health Services Threat and Risk Assessment teams ◦ Intimidation and Bullying◦ Stalking◦ Relationship violence◦ Weapons possession◦ Suicidal behavior◦ Physical Assault Wong, 2013
• Individual counseling services
• Safety/crisis planning
• Behavior plans
• Therapeutic & skill-building groups
• Youth development activities
• Case/Care management
School-Based Mental Health Interventions
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Trauma-Informed Schools Require Broad Partnerships
A partnered approach engages all stakeholders
Implement components in a manner that fits within each schools’ unique organizational structure and culture
Wong 2013
Safe and Supportive Schools Policy
Addresses disproportionality by eliminating suspensions
based solely on “willful defiance” and replacing with
integration of School-Wide Positive Behavior
Interventions and Supports, Restorative Practices,
Trauma-Sensitive Practices, and practices that address
implicit and explicit bias.
Systematic School-Wide Response Staffing and funding Partnerships Tiered Wellness services Referral process Progress monitoring Safe and Supportive Schools’ Policy
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Implications of Child Trauma for Teachers, Administrators & School Staff
Trauma generated behaviors are complex but can be understood and addressed by educators
A positive teacher student relationship may take an investment of more time with a traumatized child.
Student-teacher trust must be established before the process of teaching and learning can truly begin
Working with trauma-exposed children can evoke distress in providers that makes it more difficult for them to teach and manage the classroom
Wong, 2013
How can school staff help?
Entire ClassroomEstablish classroom
agreements for behavior
Provide routines and consistency
Provide explicit preparation for changes
and transitions
Create time in schedule for community building,
circles, mindfulness
Give opportunities for creative expression
Teach about the power of mindsets
Individual & Groups of Students
Build 1:1 relationships with struggling students
3:1 ratio of positive to negative
Allow students to step outside of the classroom or put their head down
Use restorative practices language
Seat students near the front or near you
Mind-brain-body breaks
Mind-Brain-Body Breaks
• Deep breathing • Progressive
relaxation • Stretching or
Movement• Imagery
• Mindfulness• Quiet Ball• One-minute Dance
Party Gonoodle.com
www.brainbreaks.blogspot.comhttp://www.coloradoedinitiative.org/resources/teacher-toolbox-activity-breaks/
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How can the school environment help?
Behavior Plans1:1 counseling +
consultMental health
referralsStudent Study Teams
Psycho-educational groupsReferrals to on campus activities and servicesMentoring programs
Alternative to suspension programs
Classroom presentationsSchool-wide PBIS/Single School Culture
Youth development programsFamily events
Entire staff professional development
UCSF HEARTS Approach to Addressing Chronic Stress & Trauma in Schools
Psychotherapy for students + consultation with teachers; IEP consultation (5%)
Care team meetings for at-risk students & school-wide issues; Trauma-informed discipline policies; Teacher wellness groups (15%)
Building staff capacity: Training, consultation on trauma-sensitive practices; Promoting staff wellness; addressing stress, burnout, secondary trauma
Partnering with staff for Universal Supports: Safe, supportive school climate; PBIS; Restorative Practices; Social-emotional learning curriculum; Health education on coping with stress (100%)
Dorado, 2015
How Can Schools Support Traumatized Students?
• Build relationships with struggling students• Create a safe and predictable environment with
clear, consistent rules• Provide opportunities for students to meaningfully
participate in class with some control & responsibility
• Embed mental health into the curriculum• Check assumptions, observe, and question• Be a model for appropriate behavior and relational
skills• Work with students to create a self-care plan to
address triggers
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After reviewing this research, is there something you would add to your toolbox? Something you would do differently?
Tips for Educators• Coordinate efforts with others and make referrals
• Let students know you care by listening, empathizing, and providing structure
• Support and encourage participation in programs at your school that build relationships and student assets
• Offer ways for families to connect to your school
• Don’t make promises you can’t keep
• When you become aware of a student who has experienced trauma, ask for help
How to Respond When a Student Is Triggered…• Breathe! Be calm and you will help the student be calm.
• Do not use this as a time to try to change behavior or demand respect.
• Call for help, or ask another person to call.
• Notice your tone of voice and personal space.
• Remember that the student is probably not engaged in the pre-frontal cortex right now!
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Self-Care Is Critical
“It is not uncommon for school professionals who have a classroom with one or more students struggling from the effects of trauma to experience symptoms very much like those their students are exhibiting.”
The Heart of Learning and Teaching: Compassion, Resilience, and Academic Success
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Seek Support Or Consultation If…
You are dreaming about students’ trauma, or can’t stop thinking about them.
You are having trouble concentrating, sleeping, or are feeling more irritable.
You feel numb or detached.
SRI International, April 2015
Resources• Trauma-Sensitive School Toolkit
http://sspw.dpi.wi.gov/sspw_mhtrauma• Social-Emotional Learning Curricula
http://www.casel.org/• School Mental Health Program Resources:
California School-Based Health Alliance, www.schoolhealthcenters.org
• Restorative Practiceswww.ocde.us/healthyminds//Pages/Restorative_Practices.aspx
More Resources• Adolescent Health Working Group
www.ahwg.net• Harvard Center on the Developing Brain
http://developingchild.harvard.edu/• Trauma-Sensitive School Checklist
http://sspw.dpi.wi.gov/sspw_mhtrauma• School Mental Health Program Consultation:
California School-Based Health Alliance, www.schoolhealthcenters.org
• Trauma and Schools www.ocde.us/HealthyMinds/Pages/Resources.aspx
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Understanding and Responding to Adverse Childhood Experiences in the School SettingPamela Kahn, MPH, BS, RN Coordinator, Health and Wellness
pkahn@ocde.us
Lucy Vezzuto, Ph.D. Student Mental Health, Social-Emotional Learning & School Climate
lvezzuto@ocde.us
Orange County Dept. of EducationCenter for Healthy Kids & Schools
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